Does iPhone 7 support 20w fast charging

Do you want to charge your iPhone 14 13 and iPhone 12 2.5× faster than original 1A iphone charger? If you only have a USB-C to iphone cable, than you have to buy a USB C PD wall charger. Now, Fetchpower 20W PD wall charger with USB-C to Lighting cable helps to access the FAST CHARGING fastly at home or office.

Customer Frequently asked questions and answers:
Question: Why my iPhone X and iPhone 11 can't access to fast charging while use the USB C to iphone Cable?
Answer: You only have the iPhone fast charger cable without the PD Wall plug, so it can't.

20W Unrivaled Fast Charging Kit
Starting Fetchpower 20W iPhone fast charger, with revolutionary charging speed, superior safety, enhanced durability and maximum portability. This set of USB-C charger is built to charge your iPhone 12 with top speed while keeping it safe. Great performance with travel-ready design allows it to accompany you wherever you go.

20W Fast USB C Charger Compatible with PD Fast Charging Devices :
Compatible for iPhone 14 13 12 / 12 Pro / 12 Pro Max / 12 mini
Compatible for iPhone SE 2020, iPhone 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max
Compatible for iPhone XS Max, XS, XR, X, 8 Plus, 8
Compatible for iPad Pro 10.5, iPad Air 3 10.5, iPad mini 5 7.9
Compatible for iPad Pro 11 (2018), iPad Pro 12.9(2018)
Compatible for iPhone 7 7 Plus, 6 6 Plus, 6S 6S Plus, 5c, 5s, 5, iPad air, iPad mini, iPad Pro and more Apple devices in a original charging speed
-You also can get fast charging for Android phones which support PD

What you get?
1 x USB-C to Lightning Cable
1 x PD Wall Charger

For some reason, Apple often chooses not to include the best charging option with its devices. This is particularly odd with 9.7” iPads, which ship with a 10W power adapter. Those haven’t been available for sale from Apple since 2013.

According to the Apple Online Store, the 12W USB Power Adapter is compatible with the iPhone 7 and 7+.

Both 4.7” and 5.5” iPhones can use up to 10W power adapters to charge faster, as measured by an ammeter and System Information.

Either way, power is drawn by the “receiving” device, so there is no risk in using an adapter that provides more power. If the charger can provide the requested wattage, it does; otherwise, the highest power output is negotiated.

If you plug into a Mac’s USB port, your Mac will deliver 2.1A (10W) to iPads and to the larger iPhones (6 and above). It will deliver 500mA to WATCH and 1A to smaller iPhones (SE and lower).

I have tested this with a 2013 iMac. It is possible that newer Macs are able to provide 2.4A to iPads.

Update 2017/03/22: iPad 5 and iPad mini 4 now ship with a 12W power adapter. According to the chosen verbiage, this may be the standard going forward.

Which power adapter should I use to charge my iPad?

The 12.9-inch iPad Pro, 9.7-inch iPad Pro, iPad (5th generation), and iPad mini 4 come with a 12W USB Power Adapter. Some previous iPad models came with a 10W USB Power Adapter. If you need to purchase an additional adapter, choose a 12W adapter because it can charge all iPad models.

I'm considering to buy a 20 watt charger for my iOS-devices. Obviously it charges a device two to three times faster then the 5 watt chargers, which I currently use.

I'm not sure about that, the BMS on the iOS device should alter its power draw to match what it's programmed to accept, given the current state of the battery.

If 5 W is the most it can charge at, then plugging it into a 20 W charger isn't going to force more than 5 W in.

If your device is capable of drawing more than your current charger provides then you'll see some improvements in charge time with a higher capacity charger but not necessarily by the ratio of how many watts the new charger provides vs the old one, ie. 20/5 = 4x faster. The BMS has to accept 20 W and even then things are a bit more nuanced as 20 W would be the maximum, not continual power draw.

Might it reduce the life-time of the battery? Or is it even dangerous (strong heating up, explosions)?

It really shouldn't, unless there's an existing flaw in the battery or charger.

Should I definitely get an original Apple charger? Or are others vendors safe too?

I think that's going to be tough to get a definite answer for unless you have a teardown on the specific device, from someone qualified to comment on its quality. I've seen some teardowns of USB chargers with terrible isolation and there have been cases of people being shocked while using their phone as it's charging.

I'd put money on there being plenty of properly made, safe chargers out there. The question I ask myself is: do I feel safe plugging a $1,000+ phone into this to save a few dollars, or is my peace of mind worth the ~$30 for an OEM part that I've seen a teardown confirm that at least the design is sound?

Can I charge my iPhone 7 with 20W charger?

20W charger does not send more power or current as perceived by you. It will fast charge only iPhone 8 and later up to 50 percent battery in around 30 minutes. Older phones will just charge.

Can iPhone 7 be charged with fast charger?

which charger is suitable for fast charging.. You can use the 18W power adapter (or even larger power adapters) on an iPhone 7 and it will not harm it.

How many watts can an iPhone 7 handle?

According to the Apple Online Store, the 12W USB Power Adapter is compatible with the iPhone 7 and 7+. Both 4.7” and 5.5” iPhones can use up to 10W power adapters to charge faster, as measured by an ammeter and System Information.

Can 20W charger be used for older iPhones?

Is Apple's 20W Charger Fast Enough? The 20W fast charger is not a bad choice if you want to fast-charge your iPhone 12 or earlier iPhone model.